Archive: Category: TechPresident

09/24/2014

Wartime A website claiming that it was about to leak nude photos of actress Emma Watson in retaliation for a powerful feminist speech she gave last week at the United Nations now turns out to have been a marketing stunt by a PR firm, reports Brian Koerber for Mashable. Worse yet, the firm, Rantic Marketing, claims its real purpose was to push for the censorship and shutdown of free-for-all site 4chan. Watson's HeForShe gender solidarity campaign now has more than 100,000 backers worldwide. Josh Stearns, the director of the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation's journalism sustainability program, is calling out media organizations for not telling readers how much data about them they may be collecting and how that data is being used. Amen...

09/23/2014

Climate Changes Google is going to end its relationship with the right-wing American Legislative Exchange Council, finally giving in to the #DontFundEvil campaign led by Forecast the Facts. Speaking on the Diane Rehm radio show in Washington, DC, Google's chairman Eric Schmidt said, ""Well, the company has a very strong view that we should make decisions in politics based on facts—what a shock. And the facts of climate change are not in question anymore. Everyone understands climate change is occurring, and the people who oppose it are really hurting our children and our grandchildren and making the world a much worse place. And so we should not be aligned with such people—they're just, they're just literally lying." Related? Apple CEO Tim Cook...

09/22/2014

Packed The 300,000 to 400,000 climate activists that packed New York City's streets yesterday are "louder and rowdier than the old-school greens who dominated the movement when Barack obama entered the White House," writes Elana Schor for Politico. She also compares them to the Tea Party, adding: The new breed reigns supreme on social media: 350 has 201,000 Twitter followers, more than the Sierra Club, League of Conservation Voters, the NRDC or EDF. When [350.org co-founder Bill] McKibben launched a live climate tour in 2012, an estimated 24,000 people helped sell out 22 shows, and his group has volunteers in 188 countries. Its lobbying budget is tiny, though — because it tends to disdains all that. One way the march was emphatically not...

09/19/2014

Scotched Does Verizon, which sued to stop the FCC's open Internet rule, really love the open Internet, as it's claiming? Jon Brodkin explores that question for ArsTechnica. NPR says Verizon has spent $100 million to lobby Congress on the issue in the last five years. Citing the work of conservative writer James Heaney, techDirt's Michael Masnick explains why net neutrality does not equal a government takeover of the Internet, a theme we're hearing more of lately from some Republicans. Cities with ultra-fast broadband, like Chattanooga, Tennessee, have slightly higher per-capita GDP, a new study by the Analysis Group has found, Brian Fung reports for the Washington Post. Just released: "Civil Rights, Big Data, and Our Algorithmic Future," by David Robinson, Harlan Yu and Aaron...

09/18/2014

Resets If there was any doubt that the consumer zeitgeist has shifted in the wake of Edward Snowden's disclosures, this headline for Brian Chen's story on Apple's updated operating system should put that to rest: "Apple Says iOS Update Keeps Data Private, Even From the Police." This letter from Apple CEO Tim Cook, accompanying the iOS8 rollout, about the company's "commitment to your privacy" can and is being interpreted as a direct attack on its competitor Google. He writes: A few years ago, users of Internet services began to realize that when an online service is free, you’re not the customer. You’re the product. But at Apple, we believe a great customer experience shouldn’t come at the expense of your privacy. Our business...

09/17/2014

Connecting the Dots A new report from Take Back the Tech criticizes major social media companies for their lack of transparency about how they handle complaints of abuse against women on their platforms, reports Caitlin Dewey for the Washington Post. Of the three companies scrutinized, Twitter, YouTube and Facebook, only Facebook gets a passing grade for explaining how its reporting process works. On its website, Take Back the Tech is asking users to self-report how each platform handles abuse. Author James Bamford connects the dots between a recent protest from veterans of Israel's elite intelligence Unit 8200 and Edward Snowden's revelation that the NSA shares raw data with that unit and asks, in a New York Times op-ed, if that data is being...

09/16/2014

Splits A coalition of major privacy advocates, government whistleblowers and advocacy groups have come out against the Senate version of the USA Freedom Act, reports Andrea Peterson for the Washington Post. Their concerns include ambiguous language in the bill, the absence of provisions more protective of Americans' privacy, and immunity for corporations that help spy on Americans. At the same time, other organizations, including the ACLU and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, are still backing the bill. "We're not saying that anyone's interpretations are wrong, just that this bill can be interpreted in numerous different ways, which has previously proven to be a major problem. Our issue is not just that the bill fails to stop many kind of abuses, but that it...

09/15/2014

Lessig of Two Evils Saturday, Harvard professor Lawrence Lessig sent a long email to his MayDay PAC list titled "Optimism" and seeking to explain to its 60,000+ donors why, despite its modest impact on the just concluded New Hampshire Republican Senate primary, they should still take heart. The email raises more questions than it answers. (Since I can't find it online, I've posted the text here.) On the plus side, Lessig argues that the money MayDay spent in New Hampshire backing longshot Jim Rubens against frontrunner Scott Brown (which Slate reported at a whopping $1.6 million and Re/Code put at a still substantial $600K) had an impact in raising attention to the issue of money in politics. He writes that 37% of...

09/14/2014

This is the text of an email that Lawrence Lessig sent to members of MayDay PAC on September 13, 2014. Dear _______ This is a long letter. I am sorry for that, but it needs to be. Our game is chess, not checkers. To see what we’re doing, and why, takes more than a Tweet. And if you can take the 15 minutes it will take to read what follows, you will see why we all should be optimistic and proud of what MAYDAY.US has done. You have helped start an incredible movement. And I am more optimistic than ever about our chances of success. — — — Our second election was hard — but after spending some time studying the data, and...

09/12/2014

Data Dumps The Internet Slowdown appears to have generated at least 111,000 new public comments to the FCC on its "Open Internet" proposal, with Fight for the Future--one of its organizers--claiming that actually more than 500,000 were submitted through Battleforthenet.com, reports Alex Howard. During Yahoo's losing fight in 2008 against a secret court order demanding it turn over customer data, the US government threatened to fine it $250,000 a day, newly declassified documents reveal. As Vindu Goel and Charlie Savage report for the New York Times, "The records … provide perhaps the clearest corroboration yet of the Internet companies’ contention that they did not provide the government with direct access to vast amounts of customer data on their computers." Extending the civic tech...